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Re: Re: Who's playable in 1337?

Originally posted by The camel
DoomH4x0rs, KeWlKlan etc..? :D :D

Ahem.. i think english, french & dukes or scotland to be the most intresting ones.. it is the year of 100-year war started.. iirc ;)
Baaah the Greek Empire (aka Byzantium, aka Eastern Roman Empire, aka Roman Empire :D) shall rule the earth.... well ok maybe only Europe.... or something ;) :D
Anyway, I do think that the Byzantine empire will be one of the most interesting dynasties to play during any period in the game
 
Originally posted by The camel
so when was lithuania christianised?
With the exception of a short period under Mindaugas (1251-63), when the king (also the only period Lithuania was a kingdom) was Christian, Lithuania was pagan until the conversion of Jogaila in 1377(ish).
 
Re: Re: Re: Who's playable in 1337?

Originally posted by Ape
Baaah the Greek Empire (aka Byzantium, aka Eastern Roman Empire, aka Roman Empire :D) shall rule the earth.... well ok maybe only Europe.... or something ;) :D
Anyway, I do think that the Byzantine empire will be one of the most interesting dynasties to play during any period in the game

In 1337? The situation Byzantium will be in will be very little better than the situation it is in at the start of EU2.
 
Re: Re: Re: Re: Who's playable in 1337?

Originally posted by Demetrios
In 1337? The situation Byzantium will be in will be very little better than the situation it is in at the start of EU2.
I said interesting, didnt I? ;) :D
 
Originally posted by Tamas
Could all these playable Dukes and stuff mean that more then 1 guy in Hungary will be playable? :drools:

Johan said all, no?? So if more than one guy in Hungary they'd be :p
 
Originally posted by Txini
Johan said all, no?? So if more than one guy in Hungary they'd be :p

:drops on the floor, then climbs back to the seat:

I already have the plan: edit my family name in place of a hungarian duke, revolt, defeat the Árpáds, and start a glorious line of kings! :D
 
Havard said:
With the exception of a short period under Mindaugas (1251-63), when the king (also the only period Lithuania was a kingdom) was Christian, Lithuania was pagan until the conversion of Jogaila in 1377(ish).

1387 is the official year. It was done by Jogaila and Vytautas.
 
Greece

Greece in 1337 was a hell of political complications, with the Catalan Company in Athens and Thebes, the Brienne lords at Argos and Nauplia, the Hainault at Achaia, the Venetians at Negroponte and Modon, and all sort of adventurers claiming doubtful rights going back to the 4th crusade and the Latin Empire, buying and selling castles all around, a world in itself.